GOP tax writer’s top aide heads to K Street

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Nov 25, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Caitlin Oprysko

With help from Daniel Lippman 

FIRST IN PI — ATLAS HIRES MALLIOTAKIS CHIEF: The top aide for one congressional tax writer has decamped for K Street as jockeying over a tax package prepares to kick into overdrive.

Alex Bolton, who served as chief of staff to House Ways and Means member Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.) for the past four years, is joining Atlas Crossing as a senior vice president of government affairs, where he’ll help build out a tax practice. He previously was a field finance director for the NRCC.

— Bolton joins the firm with downtown demand for tax expertise at a premium even before Republicans scored complete control of Washington next year — virtually guaranteeing that any bill to renew expiring tax cuts from the 2017 GOP tax law will be more expansive than if Democrats had held onto the White House or either chamber of Congress. House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith nodded to that dynamic in a statement provided by the firm praising Bolton as an “outstanding team player and strategist.”

— “With so many important policy debates in front of [the] Ways and Means Committee next year, I’m sure he will continue to provide excellent advice as we approach the new Republican Congress,” Smith added.

SAFE BETS: Thousands of industry donors poured over $425 million into the election this year — with nearly two-thirds of that financial support backing the Republican Party and its pledges to repeal regulations and cut taxes, your host reports with Rosmery Izaguirre.

— That turned out to be a good bet, according to our analysis of campaign finance data from 2,400 corporate PACs, 39 super PACs with industry ties and donations from CEOs of 100 large U.S. companies.

— Of the money the business community spent on GOP candidates, over 90 percent went to winners. On the flip side, Democrats trailed on both counts. The party, which campaigned on raising corporate taxes and reining in major corporations, received only 36 percent of industry contributions — of which 64 percent went to winning candidates.

A chart shows industry contributions and independent expenditures by beneficiary party.

— Some of the sectors that spent the most were fueled by a handful of wealthy donors, like Elon Musk, looking to pad their bottom lines by electing like-minded lawmakers. But not every industry got a good return on the vast sum it invested — click through for a full breakdown of the business world’s biggest winners and losers.

Happy Monday and welcome to PI. Send tips: coprysko@politico.com. And be sure to follow me on X: @caitlinoprysko.

SPEAKING OF: Our Hailey Fuchs reports that “as Musk spends weeks palling around with Trump at Mar-a-Lago … their proximity has the space industry fearing that Musk could rig the space race in his favor by diverting billions of dollars in government funding to SpaceX,” essentially setting up a monopoly in the sector.

— The threat is especially pronounced for SpaceX rival Blue Origin, whose founder Jeff Bezos has earned the Trump moniker “Jeff Bozo” and who has clashed with Musk and his company for years.

— The implications of both men’s relationships with Trump “could shape the next chapter of private space exploration, and the space industry is scrambling to understand how Musk could crowd out competitors or fill influential government positions with his allies, including the head of NASA.”

— Elsewhere in the business world, Trump’s reelection has executives looking back on Apple CEO Tim Cook’s playbook of deploying personal lobbying to help stay in the president-elect’s good graces, The Wall Street Journal’s Chip Cutter and Aaron Tilley write.

— “In the first Trump administration, the Apple executive pioneered a template for how business leaders should engage with Trump.” But “replicating Cook’s playbook will likely prove challenging, executives say.”

— “Few companies carry the name recognition of Apple and Cook. Some lobbyists and corporate advisers have already found that, if Trump doesn’t have an existing relationship with an executive, getting on his schedule now is difficult,” and doesn’t always guarantee success.

ANOTHER TAX HIRE: Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld has also picked up a former top aide to a member of the House’s tax writing panel. Lauren Rubin, a former legislative director for Ways and Means member Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.) has joined the firm as a senior counsel focused on tax policy. Rubin has most recently been a senior manager at Washington Council Ernst & Young.

CHANGES IN LATITUDE: Trump’s return has D.C.’s lobbyists “preparing for a seismic shift in how — and where — they do business,” Dave Levinthal (a PI alum) reports for Business Insider, with the industry realizing that “having a significant presence in Florida is now an essential part of doing business in Washington.”

— “First and foremost, that means hiring lobbyists in the state to work the hallways and links at Mar-a-Lago, where Trump and his inner circle have been charting the transition and making Cabinet picks. A presence at the resort — along with the golf courses Trump owns in West Palm Beach, Doral, and Jupiter — is now seen as a major currency in the lobbying game.”

— “Never before, lobbyists say, has the geographic center of power shifted so dramatically with the arrival of a new administration. In many respects, they say, Palm Beach is going to be the new K Street … particularly since Trump no longer owns a luxury hotel blocks from the White House. What’s more, the consensus among lobbyists is that anyone who hopes to influence Trump this time around will have to dispense with traditional lobbying conventions.”

FIRST IN PI: The U.S. Chamber of Commerce donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the main group working to elect state Republican attorneys general last year as members of the Republican Attorneys General Association sided with the business community in a Supreme Court case that could have shuttered the CFPB, tax returns show.

— The court ruled in May that CFPB’s funding mechanism does not violate the constitution, rejecting the argument brought by a group representing payday lenders who were seeking to overturn a CFPB rule clamping down on the industry.

— More than two dozen RAGA members in 2023 filed an amicus brief urging the justices to strike down CFPB’s funding mechanism, as did a coalition of business groups led by the Chamber. Republican attorneys general separately petitioned to deliver their own oral argument in the case but were denied by the court.

— According to the Chamber’s tax filing, which was shared with PI by liberal watchdog group Accountable.US, the business group donated $375,000 to RAGA last year, on top of $375,620 donated by the Chamber’s Institute for Legal Reform. Not including a $250,000 donation by the ILR this year, disclosures show RAGA has received more than $7 million from the Chamber and its legal arm since 2018, when the payday lender groups first filed their lawsuit.

— A broader analysis by Accountable.US from last August found that the Chamber wasn’t the only organization siding with the payday lenders to donate to RAGA since 2018, but they were by far the largest.

— In addition to the Chamber’s donation to RAGA, whose funding took a brief hit after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, it also disclosed contributions of $250,000 apiece last year to the Republican Governors Association and the Republican State Leadership Committee. In a statement, Accountable.US President Caroline Ciccone argued the funding betrays the Chamber’s nonpartisan bonafides, while also pointing to Republican AGs’ recently renewed fight to restrict access to the abortion pill.

— “The Chamber has ongoing relationships with both Democratic and Republican state attorneys general,” said Stephen Waguespack, the president of the Institute for Legal Reform and the Chamber’s senior vice president of federation, state and local advocacy. “We have supported RAGA for years because state attorneys general play an important part in enforcing a fair legal environment.”

CLEGG’S LONG GAME: Long before Congress voted this spring to force the sale of TikTok by its Chinese parent company or face a ban in the U.S., Facebook and Instagram owner Meta had been planting the seeds for challenging the then-smaller competitor by raising concerns about its ties to the Chinese government in speeches, meetings on the Hill and dinners with Trump — even as Facebook was facing a political maelstrom of its own, per The Telegraph’s James Titcomb and Matthew Field.

— It “was one of the company’s first major lobbying initiatives after Sir Nick Clegg, the former [British] deputy prime minister and Liberal Democrat leader, was hired as the company’s head of global affairs in 2018.” Clegg “was a relative DC outsider. However, his self-proclaimed status as an old-fashioned liberal in contrast to TikTok’s Chinese background helped buttress the company’s argument.”

Jobs report

Reckitt named Alessio Fasano as chief science and medical officer of the company’s Mead Johnson Nutrition business. He was most recently W. Allan Walker chair of pediatrics at Mass General Brigham.

— The Congressional Management Foundation has added Tim Monahan, Lindsey Kerr, and Jeremy Deutsch to its board.

Mohamed Fatah is now executive vice president for government affairs and global business development at Stryk Global Diplomacy. He is a former senior international affairs officer at the Pentagon advising the Office of the Secretary of Defense and J2 at the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Right Turn Strategies is adding Amy Kremer as vice president, Kevin Jenkins, Rob Smith and Kylie Jane Kremer as of counsel, Peter Murray as government affairs specialist and Shawn Gardner as director of marketing and client development. Amy Kremer is the founder of Tea Party Patriots and Women for Trump.

Avoq is adding Steve Aaron as a partner as it acquires his SRA Communications.

Brian Greer was promoted to partner and head of federal affairs at Empire Consulting Group. He was previously a partner and is a House Armed Services Committee alum.

Laura Peavey has joined the Financial Services Forum as its new director of media and outreach. Peavey was communications director for the House Financial Services Committee and was the primary spokesperson for outgoing Chair Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) and Republican members of the committee.

— The Obama Foundation is adding Rahshiene Taha as chief marketing officer and Emily Bittner as vice president of communications. Taha previously was vice president and head of IP development and marketing partnerships at Live Nation. Bittner previously was senior adviser to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.

Kara Hauck has joined Sable Strategy as a senior vice president. She was previously senior manager of corporate communications and brand PR at Lowe’s.

New Joint Fundraisers

None.

New PACs

The Blue Anchor Project (Super PAC)

End Term Limits (Hybrid PAC)

New Lobbying REGISTRATIONS

Advocacybuild, LLC: Copiah-Lincoln Community College

Collective Strategies & Communications LLC (Formerly Collective Communications L: H.F. Vickers LLC

Public Strategies Washington, Inc.: Lg Electronics U.S.A., Inc.

Strategic Marketing Innovations: J.H. Whitney Data Services

The Picard Group, LLC: River Birch, LLC

New Lobbying Terminations

Bose Public Affairs Group: Marathon Oil Company

Cuney, Edwards, Washington, And Associates: Lip Chip LLC

Holland & Knight LLP: Biomarin Pharmaceutical, Inc.

Linden Strategies: Euro Luxe Trading Corp

Sic Group USa LLC: Institute For Democracy And Develomment Polita

 

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